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TAIWAN...despite analogies in the press, and especially in the recently concluded presidential campaign on Taiwan, the differences between Taipei and Lhasa are too obvious to require much discussion.
(Most fundamentally...while Tibet was basically independent for most of the 20th Century, but has not been since China's military take-over in 1951, Taiwan has been functionally independent of Beijing for the better part of 200 years. And unlike Tibet, of course, Taiwan is now a vibrant liberal democracy, with capitalism in full flower.)
It should be noted, however, that the KMT's president-elect, Ma Ying-jeou, managed to miss the obvious when confronted by a last-minute DPP charge that "Tibet shows what Taiwan is in for under KMT rule".
A more apt argument would have been that continued DPP agitation of Beijing risked leading to tragic excess by the Mainland, so that's one more reason why the people of Taiwan should favor the KMT.
(Indeed, one can argue that the Bush Administration implicitly...and sometimes very directly...made that point for the past six years. To arguments that the US didn't actively interfere, we'd respond that's true only if one's definition of interference required a cruise missile on DPP headquarters...)
In any event...the fundamental Bush concern was two-fold: first, that maintaining a good working relationship with Beijing was, to be brutally frank, obviously more important to the US, and to the world, than maintaining a good working relationship with Taipei; but second, that protecting the newly emergent liberal democracy on Taiwan was simultaneously a genuine US interest.
The dilemma became that DPP policies and actions increasingly put each of these interests at risk, due to the nearly universal assessment that for Beijing, nationalism as state policy potentially trumps all other interests.
Which brings us to the new government on Taiwan, headed by the avowedly more Mainland-focused KMT.
We had the pleasure and privilege of being on Taiwan as the guest of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in the days leading up to the election, and we can personally testify to the vigor of democracy in action...and the seriousness of both the policy debate, and the alternatives presented by the contending parties.
Election of the KMT raises issues in management of US relations which we don't have time for tonite, but will definitely explore in a later Report.
To the basic theme of tonite's China/Tibet section, we'd argue that the task of Presidents Hu and Ma is to bridge the spiritual and policy disconnects between Beijing and Taipei.
Especially must the new KMT government work to meld consciousness of the now universal acceptance of "Taiwan identity" by the 32-million people on the island to the power realities represented by both Beijing and Washington.
That includes helping Washington and like-minded allies to persuade Beijing that WHO observer status (one very important example) is in everyone's interest.
Delegation colleague Denny Roy, of the East-West Center on Hawaii, has written a really thorough analysis of what our group saw and thought, so let's turn the discussion over to him for now, with a promise to pick-up later this week on things like F-16 sales, et al:
[the Denny Roy piece is linked in the post below]
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5 comments:
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With this passage you have a great deal of truth...
In any event...the fundamental Bush concern was two-fold: first, that maintaining a good working relationship with Beijing was, to be brutally frank, obviously more important to the US, and to the world, than maintaining a good working relationship with Taipei...
Followed by this piece of BS...
...but second, that protecting the newly emergent liberal democracy on Taiwan was simultaneously a genuine US interest.
If it was of such genuine interest, then you'd think they'd realize that the KMT (who have continued to piss on democracy in the past 8 years -- remember, distinctly, the aftermath of the 2004 election?) wouldn't exactly be the ideal choice towards this goal.
And then insanity sets in...
The dilemma became that DPP
policies and actions increasingly put each of these interests at risk...
LOL! Yeah. We have a freakin' boycott of a 2 referendums in 2 consecutive elections and it is the DPP that is putting democracy at risk.
They even missed the population of Taiwan by about 10 million. But maybe they were anticipating the influx of "emigrants" from the "mainland".
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It is a very useful report that gives a good view of how Beijing's view of affairs has become Washington's.
I recall that Steve Yates, Cheney's former Asia advisor, told us that Bush had no Asia/China policy per se.
This report says there is a posture, but it hardly seems like a strategy. But then, the US has never really been interested in the gory and troublesome socio-cultural details in any of its foreign policy except those which benefit the US...
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Michael, it is, of course, enlightening in that regard. However, it sickens me how off the mark it is. Not surprising, though.
That Roy piece has it's moments, but again, the KMT slant is pretty obvious. Notice these two contradictory clips...
As U.S. Taiwan politics expert Shelley Rigger noted, DPP campaigners relied on a "conversion strategy" that emphasized a shrill and divisive message: voting DPP is the only defense against Taiwan being sold out to China. The fact that many native Taiwanese voted for Ma proves that this narrow definition of patriotism has limited appeal.
And then he goes on to support this "shrill" and "divisive" message with these words...
Ma also favors expanded cross-strait economic and social contacts, which are part of the PRC strategy for peaceful unification. In short, a Ma presidency will greatly assure China that Taiwan is back on track toward politically joining China. Unless the Chinese leadership becomes overly anxious, this should greatly reduce the need to influence Taiwan through military threats.
LOL!
The idea that the DPP were the culprits in the delayed arms deals is laughable, too.
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Just wondering- what do you mean when you say Taiwan hasn't been a part of China for 200 years? I think it's a little over 100 years. Wasn't it a province of Qing China until Japan won it in 1895?
Anyways, history aside, I was pretty surprised that the report mixed up 23 million (the actual population of Taiwan) and 32 million (the result of Bush-style dyslexia).
Is it possible that the KMT bought Western media? With all that cash (plus more coming in after May 20th), it seems pretty likely. How much do you think it took to make The Times call him a lawyer?
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